Thursday, August 23, 2012

The adventures of reuphostering

When I get tired of cleaning my house in my free time, I usually find a new project to tackle. This week was a long overdue project, reupholstering an Eli size chair that I bought at a garage sale four months ago. The biggest problem with this chair was it was incredibly dirty. The second problem was that it was incredibly pink. The third problem being that it had "Katie" written in big letters on it. See for yourself:






None of these things made it very suited for my little boy. And yet he still loved to climb on it, jump on it, and rock in it every chance he got. So I decided I'd better turn it into my Eli's chair before he grew up anymore and lost all interest in it.

The prospect quite frankly was terrifying to me... I had NO clue how to reupholster and was afraid I would ruin it in the process of trying. So good news to all of you who are terrified to try it. It's not as complicated as it looks. Bad news? My fingers are still bleeding. But never fear, I'll give you the tips I learned along the way.  (By the way, I did look up a few tutorials online before trying this to get a few tips)

Step 1: Take the existing fabric off piece by piece.

In this case it started with the front pieces and the buttons:


I also took pictures so I could remember how the layout looked before I took it to pieces. It proved very helpful when reassembling!

After the front pieces came off, it was a matter of pulling out staples from top to bottom, front to back. (And who knew a little chair like this could hold so many hundreds of staples?)






The bad news was every time I thought I was almost done, I would uncover a new layer... like this black material covering the bottom of the chair...
 
And find about a million more staples to take out!


 Tip #1 (Or what I wish I would have known...): For heavens sake buy a staple remover. Your sore bloody multiply stabbed by a screwdriver hands will thank you!!!

Previous to removing the black material, I unscrewed the wooden rockers and set them aside. I reused them, the screws, and the black material when I put it all back together again.

When all of the visible staples were removed, there was one other step I hadn't counted on: 6 screws held the back of the chair in place, which had to be taken out.

Tip 2: (Or what my hands wish I would have known...): For heavens sake buy (or borrow) an electric screw driver or drill! Pulling out 2 inch screws with a hand screwdriver = SORE hands the next day.

So at the end of this process (and about 8 hours later... again... electric tools and staple removers are a good idea :)) this is what I had:


(Ignore the pattern on the seat of the chair... I forgot to take a picture before I started laying it out!)

The foam was in good condition and nicely secured to the wood, so I didn't bother trying to replace it. (Thank heavens!)

The next step was to take all of the fabric pieces I had saved from the original chair, and trace out patterns on my new material. When I bought the material, I asked the woman at the fabric desk if I was buying the right material for reupholstering (since I had no idea if I was getting the right stuff!) I picked from the heaviest fabric they had, which made it much less likely to tear, and much easier to pull tightly when securing it.

I didn't pin it or worry about exact tracing since I only needed roughly the same size and shape. (All the edges are stapled down so you don't have to worry about them being neat and precise!

Tip #3: If you have a patterned fabric, don't forget to lay all of your patterns out in the same direction so that it looks uniform when you put it all together!

This was the quickest step. With a pen and a pair of scissors, all of my patterns were cut out in no time.

Then I laid the original over my new pattern, and placed it on the chair as closely in the same position as I could get it. (In this case the reason for putting the original fabric on top was because I could place it almost perfectly based on the dirt stains :)) Then I removed the original fabric, leaving only my new fabric, and went to work. I went in this order:

1. Seat, 2. Armrests

On the front and back of the armrests I stapled the bottoms first, and then puckered the sides the best I could (doing my best to copy my pictures of the original) and stapled it all down. All the while making sure to cover enough of the center that all of the staples and uncovered wood would originally be covered by the panels (in front) and the back material (in back). 

#3 was the back of the chair, then, once the fabric was secured, screwed the chair part back into place. (This was the glorious moment that my husband borrowed an electric screwdriver from our wonderful neighbors, and my life became awesome. I am not admitting to the fact that my hands hurt so badly I couldn't even turn a screwdriver at this point, so I made my husband try. After five minutes of trying he looked at me and said, "Wow, my hands are so tired and hurt so bad!" I just stared at him very unsympathetically. Then he went and borrowed the electric screwdriver, so I still consider him a hero!!! :))

Once this was all reassembled (and I was very proud of myself for rocking the power tool) I put the back on. this was one of the hardest parts because it had to be perfectly lined up since all of the staples would show. I took a piece of thin cardboard (leftover from the original) and folded it over the top to create the nice ridge you see across the top back. Then I just lined it up the best I could, folding the ends under on all sides, and stapled it on (and took out several staples and re-stapled too!).

Finally, I secured the black piece back onto the bottom of the chair, screwed the rockers back in (with the awesome power tool... I love my life) and finished with the front panels and buttons. The panels were fairly simple (Tip #4- Make sure with every piece you are pulling it as TIGHT as you can... the same went for the panels). Originally the panels had been stapled to the front with mega staples (like an inch long) but I did not want to buy another staple gun, so I decided to nail them in. I used the skinniest nails we had and prayed it wouldn't split the panels. Hallelujah it worked! (Total luck in this case since it was a total guess whether or not it would work).

The buttons were the hardest part and took a lot of experimenting to get the right size of fabric (too much fabric means they won't snap on, too little means they fray around the sides and come out on the edges.) After about an hour of trying and me close to tears (it was midnight by this point, and my chick flick was over but I wasn't going to quit till it was done!) Otto looked it up online and said there are specific kits you can buy for such things (Tip #5 I guess :)) But we did our best with what we had and FINALLY (after securing the pins to the buttons in place and directly over the nails with a hammer).... the finished product:


(Ignore all the scattered tools and fabric scraps all over the floor!) 
So now I know how to do something new. (And won't do it again for a VERY long time. :)) And Eli....

 Can do all the sitting, playing,
 Climbing
 and jumping he wants

 as king of his new domain.

(WHAT A CUTIE!)

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Touch and Feel

And.... we're back. Hopefully for more than just once a quarter this time. ;)

With my original intention to use this blog as a way to share all things creative, innovative, resourceful or my attempts at such, here is my latest endeavor... creative maybe, but this wasn't my best budget conscious project. :)

Eli turned 1 on June 15th, 2012. I wanted his party to be something that would be meaningful to HIM and not just to me, so after months of having no idea what to do.. (what IS meaningful to a 1 year old anyway?) I settled on a "Touch and Feel" themed party. We read a lot in our house, and the touch and feel books have always been his favorite. In addition, like most one year olds, ANYTHING he can touch OR feel, is exciting. :)

Here are some of the things I did:

Invitations:

I decided to go with bright, basic, mainly primary colors (red, yellow and blue) to tie it all together. One day on one of our regular walks to the park, I put a bright red shirt on him, and stopped by the next door grocery store and bought a blue helium balloon. (Actually, they gave it to me for free... SCORE!) We had fun taking several fun shots at the park:








But I finally decided on this as my favorite... took it home and doctored it a little in Photoshop and in Microsoft Publisher (Thanks Laura Harper for the suggestion!)

(If anyone wants to stalk us or steal anything from us, this is NOT our current address so you can forget about it!)

From there:
I printed several copies at costco, and set to work, cutting it to pieces.

I started by cutting a large hole in the middle of the balloon, and then cutting out three ways from there, leaving about 1/2 cm around the edge of the balloon. This way I could cut without bending the picture too much.




Next I used a black marker to trace around the balloon to get rid of the white (not perfectly cut) edges and blend the picture back together:
Then I took several blue balloons, similarly colored to the one in the picture, and cut them in half along the seam:
 Then I cut off the bottom, leaving just enough of the base to be able to secure behind the picture:

Then I took a small chunk of regular batting, and placed it in the pocket of the balloon: You could probably glue it to secure it there, but I didn't want to add one more step :)


 Then I placed the balloon/batting in the hole I had cut from the picture.I think I was just lucky that it fit as well as it did!



 I decided to use yellow cardstock as my background, since I had used bright red and blue on the actual invitation. I cut the cardstock to be slightly larger than the picture on all sides so it would create a nice border.
 This, in my opinion, was the trickiest part! I used hot glue around all four edges of the picture. Then, quickly, before the glue dried, I flipped it over, centered it on the yellow cardstock, all the while making sure the balloon stayed in place. (I originally tried to glue the balloon to the back of the invite, but found it wasted WAY too much time and only created more puckers and glue spots anyway). So WITHOUT glueing the balloon to the invite, I tried to make sure all of the edges were even, and the balloon did not stick up above the invite onto the cardstock.
 When it was done correctly, (trust me there were several mess ups :)) it ended up looking like this:
 Last step: I bought some cheap blue ribbon to match the balloons. I cut the strands about 6 inches (total estimate) long, tied a knot in the center, ripped each side into several thinner strands, and curled them with scissors. Using the knot in the center, I hot glued the curly ribbon right below my balloon and...

VOILA! My completed "touch and feel" birthday invites!
Of course the sad thing is, as happy as I was with how they turned out, I have never really been able to enjoy them since. I was so morning sick while I was making them that I just get nauseated every time I look at one now. :) Oh well, we'll keep one in the scrapbook anyway. :)

For the actual party, I decided to do all kinds of "finger foods" to follow the touch and feel theme:

This included mini eggrolls (I learned how to make them from the fabulous Windelyn Spears)
 Rice crispie treats (used cake pop dowels from walmart and blue ribbon... the chocolate is just melted chocolate chips)

 Mini Pigs and Blankets (used little smokies and cut up crescent rolls)
The handsome husband is a bonus :)
 Also served were chunks of pineapple, meatballs (in crockpot) recipe courtesy of the amazing Laura Minson, and mini bbq beef sandwiches (we got silver dollar rolls from Harmons and cut them in half).


Also served was red punch with yellow cups (plates and napkins were blue)
   ...And monkey cupcakes, since Eli's favorite stuffed animal was his monkey. The cupcake stand was an idea I stole off another blog: I bought thick colored posterboard from Walmart, traced different sized circles (using patterns such as my pizza stone, bowls, etc) and used a straight edge to cut them out (HUGE PAIN). The ribbon was hot glued around the edges, conveniently hiding my jagged edges :), and the center was made from full soda cans, wrapped in colored card stock paper and hot glued together. The tiers were hot glued to the soda cans. Don't look too closely, it looks great from a distance but isn't very straight up close. :)

Up close the monkey cupcakes (made from chocolate frosting, nilla wafers and black and white frosting) looked like this:

(This was an idea I stole from a site online and I can't remember what it is anymore!)

Just so he could have the full "touch and feel" experience (as well as the full one year old experience) I made him a full monkey cake that he could enjoy:




.... and I think he did. :)

For decorations I did the following:

1st I took a plain white onesie, (Walmart) and bought some blue fuzzy fabric. I chose a font for a "1" on Microsoft Word, blew it up, traced around it with cardstock (straight off of my computer screen) and cut it out to make a pattern. Then I cut a "1" out of the fuzzy blue fabric, pinned it to the onesie, and sewed it on in the middle. Then I took some iron on letters that said, "I am" and ironed them above the "1". Then we had a photoshoot. (A few days before the party).

Here are some of my favorite results:





Now that we had a touch and feel onesie for the occasion, I took my favorite picture of the shoot, blew it up, cut out the "1" and hot glued it to a posterboard with more of the fuzzy fabric behind the cutout, creating a touch and feel welcome poster for the front door of Eli turning one. Here is what it looked like:


In addition to the front door sign, I chose 5 of Eli's favorite things, took pictures of the ones I didn't already have good shots of, blew up the pictures, and made touch and feel posters out of them as well. The ones I chose were:

1. Dog (He LOVES dogs)
I used a fuzzy material leftover from making stockings last Christmas for the fur:
2. Bathtime
I used bubble wrap to make the bubble bath touch and feel
3.The park
I used actual bark from the playground to make this shot of him at the park touch and feel
4. Monkey (His favorite stuffed animal, and probably my favorite picture)
I used a tan rag to make the monkey's fur
5. Outside (my other favorite picture)
I used some kind of turf material that Otto geniusly found at Walmart to create the grass:
All together the display looked like this:
The pictures are now up in Eli's room, where he can play with the touch and feel pictures anytime he wants!

Other touch and feel decorations used were:

This Happy Birthday Sign I made out of cut up white card stock, and pieces of all kinds of things I had around the house from tin foil to tissue paper to fabric to cotton balls, to ribbons to raffia, and I strung it all together with twine:


I bought a plastic red tablecloth at the dollar store and hot glued red yellow and blue pom poms to make a touch and feel tablecloth: 


I put out on display some of Eli's favorite touch and feel books (with the idea that people could read them to him if he wanted... but he was always much too busy :))


I put on display a "matching" game that I grew up playing (thanks mom for lending it to me!) with different textured fabrics to match up:


I made red, yellow and blue pom poms out of tissue paper to hang from the ceiling: 


In hindsight... I needed more tissue paper. But I was too tired to go to the store again. So such as they are... they were still fun. :)

Also on display (but not touch and feel) were his 1-11 month pictures in the chair with Kody bear (my childhood teddy bear) to mark how much he was changing (also displayed on the wall in his bedroom now) along with his baby books, his Elijah letters (paper, wood and idea from wood connection, modge podge and paints from Michaels) and his board for above his crib with this saying that I love: (Vinyl lettering from Vinyl4decor, http://vinyl4decor.com/ and wooden board from the wood connection: http://www.thewoodconnection.com/). (Also the tutorial I used for how to do the distressing was from the wood connection's blog)







Eli somehow knew he was the center of attention and had a GREAT time!











 And so did we!
(Though I wanted to sleep for a week when it was over!)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY LITTLE ELIJAH! WE LOVE YOU!!!
(And just so you know, every year after this will be a pizza party. HA)